Carlson also suggested on the September 28 edition of his show that Klobuchar was politicizing the storm and further misconstrued her words, saying that she “announced on television that only if we had given her a lot more power, hurricanes wouldn’t happen, because it turns out that Amy Klobuchar and her friends control the weather if only you’d vote for them.”
On September 30, as public officials assessed the catastrophic devastation Hurricane Ian caused to large swaths of southwest Florida, Vice President Kamala Harris was asked to discuss global socioeconomic disparities in climate change impact during the Democratic National Committee’s Women’s Leadership Forum. As part of her response, Harris remarked: “It is our lowest income communities and our communities of color that are most impacted by these extreme conditions and impacted by issues that are not of their own making.”
Fox News led the charge in disparaging Harris and falsely presenting the context of her remarks to imply that the Biden administration planned to deny disaster relief to white victims of Hurricane Ian.
Fox News amplified a manufactured right-wing media controversy around an exchange between CNN’s Don Lemon and National Hurricane Center acting Director Jamie Rhome on the role climate change was playing in the rapid intensification of storms, which aired on the September 27 edition of CNN’s Don Lemon Tonight. The following day, Fox News covered the exchange extensively, using Lemon’s repeated questions about links between climate change and hurricanes to suggest that the media was politicizing the storm. That evening, all three Fox prime-time hosts — Carlson, Hannity, and Ingraham — attacked Lemon on their programs.
When Fox targets a specific media figure for talking about climate change, as the network did with Lemon, the intent is to create a chilling effect on future climate coverage.
Attacking electric vehicles and President Joe Biden’s climate and energy agenda
Against the unfolding of Hurricane Ian’s devastation, Fox News took the opportunity to take cheap shots at electric vehicles; revisit its criticism of the Biden administration's plan to release oil from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve; and defend Big Oil after Biden warned companies not to gouge prices — a practice that is not uncommon during these types of disasters, and the reason why Florida Attorney General Ashley Moody activated a hotline to report price gouging even before the storm hit the state.
All of these narratives, particularly attacks on electric vehicles, have been mainstays of Fox News coverage of Biden’s climate and energy agenda this past year before the network repurposed them for coverage of Hurricane Ian.
On the October 3 edition of his Fox show, host Jesse Watters asked: “What would happen if a family had one of these electric cars in Florida when the power went out because of the hurricane and you have to flee? It's not like you could stock up on gas.”
On the October 3 edition of Fox & Friends, co-host Steve Doocy claimed that he “got a number of emails over the last week for people looking at Florida where there was no electricity and they said, ‘Where do the people wind up charging their electric cars?’”
In an October 4 interview with Secretary of Transportation Pete Buttigieg about the recovery process in Florida, anchor Neil Cavuto said, “Much of the power was out across half of the state of Florida for a while. … Between what happened in Florida and the grid that was compromised to the point where California Gov. [Gavin] Newsom wanted people to cool it for a while on when and how often they charged their EVs, do you think this reminds folks that we're not ready, or the EVs are not ready for prime time?”